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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Birse Construction Ltd v McCormick (UK) Ltd (Formerly Mccormick (UK) Plc) [2005] EWCA Civ 940 (26 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/940.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 940 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
His Honour Judge Peter Coulson QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
MR JUSTICE PATTEN
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BIRSE CONSTRUCTION LIMITED |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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McCORMICK (UK) LIMITED (formerly McCormick (UK) Plc) |
Defendant/Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Alexander Nissen (instructed by Baker & McKenzie) for the Defendant/Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Clarke :
Introduction
The Preliminary Issues
"Preliminary Issue 1
Upon the assumption that:
a) any or all of the events ("the events") in paragraph 8 of the amended particulars of claim occurred;
b) the events constitute additions, deletions or revisions to the Work and thereby constitute Changes as defined in the first sentence of Article 14.1 of Part III of the contract but subject always to any other terms of the Contract; and/or
c) the events give rise to an entitlement to amend the lump sum for Site Establishment pursuant to Article 8.3 of Part II of the contract using the rates set forth in Attachment 14.2 to that part, subject always to any other terms of the Contract;
are the claimant's claims at paragraphs 9.1 to 9.4 of the amended particulars of claim statute-barred pursuant to the Limitation Act 1980?
Preliminary Issue 2
Was Fluor obliged to fairly and properly assess and/or estimate and/or agree Birse's entitlement in response to Birse's claims submitted on 14 November 1996 and/or 29 April 1997?
Preliminary Issue 3
If it was, and upon the assumption that:
(i) Birse's claims are not defeated by the time limits in articles 14.2, 14.3 and 17, Part III (or elsewhere); and
(ii) McCormick by itself or through Fluor failed to fairly and properly assess and/or estimate and/or agree Birse's entitlement on 13 August 1997 and/or on or after 2 September 1997;
are the claims at paragraph 9.5 of the amended particulars of claim statute-barred pursuant to the Limitation Act 1980?"
The Contract
"Accordingly, the provisions of the Contract in respect of payment for the Work were straightforward. The Lump Sum Contract Price was broken down into four constituent figures, of which three (mobilisation, demobilisation, and Site Establishment) formed one composite sum of £468,263, whilst the principal part of the Lump Sum Contract Price, namely the cost of actually carrying out the Work itself, was £3,535,224. The total Lump Sum was to be paid in accordance with the fixed, pre-set instalments set out in the Milestone Payment Schedule at Attachment 3; once one of those Milestones had been achieved, an invoice would be sent off by the Contractor, Birse, and the relevant amount paid within 30 days. Since the precise amount of the payment to be made on the achievement of any given Milestone date was agreed in advance as part of the Contract itself and was set out in the Milestone Payment Schedule at Attachment 3, there was no need for any interim valuations, certificates, or assessments, or any of the other paraphernalia of the interim accounting process required by the standard forms of building and engineering contracts. They were simply not necessary, a saving of effort and cost which is identified as one of the specific benefits of a fixed stage payment system at paragraph 4–023 of Hudson.
"14.1. Managing Contractor shall have the right, at any time the Work is in progress, to order additions, deletions and/or revisions to the work. (Hereinafter referred to as "Change/s"). Contractor will be advised of such Change/s by receipt of an approved for construction drawing or a written authorisation to perform specific work and Contractor shall immediately proceed to perform the additional and/or revised Work in strict accordance with and subject to all terms and conditions of this Contract. The provisions of this Contract shall apply to all Changes. Contractor will be advised of the names of Managing Contractor personnel authorised to issue changes to the work.
14.2 If Contractor believes that any information received from Managing Contractor in the form of additional and/or revised information drawings, specifications, exhibits or other written notices from Managing Contractor, any instruction or interpretation by Managing Contractor, or any occurrence meets the criteria for Change/s that affects either (i) Contractor's cost for performing Work or (ii) the schedule of Work, Contractor shall, within five (5) working days, notify Managing Contractor in writing and, if Managing Contractor agrees, Managing Contractor will issue a written authorisation in accordance with section 14.1 set forth above.
14.3 Contractor shall submit to Managing Contractor within five (5) working days after receipt of an approved for construction drawing or a written authorisation, a detailed take-off with supporting calculations and pricing for the change together with any adjustments in the schedule required for the performance of Work as changed. Pricing shall be in accordance with the pricing structure of this contract and shall clearly define increase, decrease or no change in payment under this Contract. Where applicable prices are not included in the Contract new prices shall be determined on the basis of extrapolation or interpolation against similar existing prices.
14.4 Contractor shall not perform Changes in the Work in accordance with this Article 14 unless Managing Contractor has issued written authority to proceed with the Change, such authority being in the form specified in section 14.1 above.
14.5 After Managing Contractor and Contractor agree on the financial effects of a change, Managing Contractor shall incorporate each such Change into a written amendment setting forth the agreed adjustments to the Contract Price. The adjustments, once made, shall not be renegotiable.
14.6 Payment of approved Changes in the Work shall be made in accordance with the provisions of Article 34.0 but invoices in respect of Changes may not be presented until a fully authorised amendment has been issued by the Managing Contractor and signed by the Contractor.
14.7 Notwithstanding the provisions of this Article 14 there shall be no change to Contract Price or Schedule of Work by reason of any Change should Contractor fail to provide Managing Contractor with the written notice of a change, and/or quantification thereof as required by Sections 14.2 and 14.3 herein, within the time periods stated.
14.8 There shall be no adjustment to Contract Price or Schedule of Work should Contractor proceed with a Change to the Work on the basis of any instruction that is not in accordance with Section 14.1.
14.9 In the event that the Managing Contractor and the Contractor cannot reach agreement on the extent of an authorised Change to the Contract Price or Schedule of Work, or if Managing Contractor does not accept Contractors assertion that a Change in the Work has occurred and Contractor maintains such an assertion, Contractor shall comply with the Article 17.0 entitled "Claims". Contractor shall proceed with the work if officially instructed to do so.
14.10 …"
"Company shall make payment within 30 calendar days from receipt by Managing Contractor of an invoice presented in accordance with the requirements of this contract. Managing Contractor shall advise rejection of an unacceptable invoice within 14 calendar days of receipt."
The judge thus held that once a Contract Amendment had been agreed in respect of a particular Change, the Contractor would invoice for the additional sum set out in the Amendment and it would be paid within 30 days from the date that the Fluor received the invoice from Birse. The judge accepted Mr Nissen's submission that there was not, and was not intended to be, any coincidence of timing between the Milestone Payment dates and the dates that invoiced Contract Amendments would fall due to be paid. He said, in my opinion correctly, that they operated entirely independently of one another.
"Subject to the provisions of Article 14.0, Contractor shall give Managing Contractor written notice within five (5) working days after the happening of any event which Contractor believes may give rise to a claim by Contractor for an increase in Contract price, or in time for performance of the work. Within ten (10) working days after the happening of such same event, Contractor shall supply Managing Contractor with a statement supporting Contractor's claim, which statement shall include Contractor's detailed estimate of the Change in Contract Price and/or Schedule of Work together with all substantiating documentation.
Company shall not be liable for, and Contractor hereby waives, any claim or potential claims of Contractor of which Contractor knew or should have known, and which was not reported by Contractor in accordance with the provisions of this Article. Any adjustments in Contract Price or time for performance of the work shall not be binding on Company unless expressly agreed in writing by the Company or Managing Contractor, and any such adjustments in Contract Price so agreed in writing shall be paid to Contractor by Company. No claim hereunder by Contractor shall be allowed after final payment is made pursuant to provisions set forth in article 43.0."
"SITE ESTABLISHMENT
This item covers the Contractor's overhead costs and other general expenses to maintain the Site Establishment on the Work Site for performance of the Work and shall include the following:
- …
- In the event of additional time spent on Work Site to perform the Work or increase in Site Establishment resources to perform the Work and Managing Contractor agrees that these are due to effects other than those within the responsibility of the Contractor, the lump sum for Site establishment shall be amended using the rates set forth in Attachment 14.2."
"39.1 Company shall not be obligated to make final payment, which shall include the release of retention, to Contractor until the following requirements have been accomplished to the satisfaction of Managing Contractor:
a) Contractor has delivered to Managing Contractor a release certificate satisfactory to Managing Contractor that Contractor has fully performed under this Contract and that all claims of Contractor for the Work are satisfied upon the making of such final payment, that no property of the Company and/or Managing Contractor or property used in connection with the Work is subject to any unsatisfied lien or claim as a result of the performance of the Work, that all rights of lien against Company and/or Managing Contractor property in connection with the Work are released (including without limitation, if Managing Contractor requests, releases of lien satisfactory in form to Company executed by all persons who by reason of furnishing material, labour or other services to Contractor for the work are potential lienors against Company and/or Managing Contractor's property), and that Contractor has paid in full all outstanding obligations against the work; and
b) Contractor has delivered to Managing Contractor satisfactory proof that all costs have been satisfied and paid, that there are no unsatisfied claims for injuries to persons or property which Managing Contractor is not reasonably satisfied are covered by insurance, and that no other indebtedness exists in connection with the Work for which Contractor is responsible; and
c) Contractor has delivered to Managing Contractor any and every document, receipt, statement of account, affidavit or assurance which Managing Contractor requires as necessary or appropriate and is within Contractor's possession, responsibility or control to ensure immunity to Company and/or Managing Contractor from any and all liens and claims for which Company and/or Managing Contractor might be or become liable; and
d) Contractor has delivered to Managing Contractor assignments to Company and/or Managing Contractor from Contractor (and from each assignee, if any, to whom Contractor with Managing Contractor approval assigned any part of the Contract and whose assignment is in effect at the time of final payment under the Contract) of any refunds, rebates, credits, or other amounts, including any interest thereon, accruing to or received by Contractor to the extent that said items are properly allowable as costs for which Contractor has been reimbursed by Company; and
e) Contractor has delivered releases to Managing Contractor discharging Company and/or Managing Contractor from all liabilities, obligations, and claims arising out of or under the Contract; and
f) Managing Contractor has issued to Contractor a notice of Acceptance of the Work."
Article 34.2 provided the actual mechanism for the final payment as follows:
"Upon Acceptance of the Work the retention monies due to Contractor shall be paid provided that Contractor shall have furnished Managing Contractor with a Release Certificate."
i) a Notice of Acceptance of the Work, issued by the Managing Contractor to the Contractor;
ii) a Release Certificate issued by the Contractor to the Managing Contractor;
iii) agreement by the Managing Contractor that all the Contractor's work had been fully performed and that all claims were satisfied upon the making of the final payment;
iv) payment of the retention monies to the Contractor.
The judge added that if and to the extent that the Contractor was not happy with the proposed final payment, it would not issue a Release Certificate (save perhaps in a form unacceptable to the Managing Contractor) and the retention monies would continue to be held by McCormick.
"Unless otherwise provided in this Contract, Company shall pay to Contractor, for performance of the Work, partial payments as the Work progresses as follows:
At the end of each calendar month, or other periodic 'close-out' date specified by Managing Contractor, Contractor shall submit to Managing Contractor progress payment work sheets to demonstrate the work performed by Contractor. Progress payment shall be based on the work agreed between Contractor and Managing Contractor to have been completed in accordance with the measured progress in the various parts of the Work. After agreement between Contractor and Managing Contractor, Contractor shall submit an invoice based on the progress payment worksheets. Agreement as to the measurement and quantities of work performed shall be made by certification of the invoice by Contractor. In the case of disagreement, Managing Contractor's estimate of the value of all work performed hereunder shall be conclusive and Contractor waives any and all entitlement to interest in the event of progress or monies being disagreed by Managing Contractor that are subsequently found to have been due and payable. Company shall pay Contractor ninety-five percent (95 per cent) of the work certified and agreed by Managing Contractor less the aggregate of all payments previously made to Contractor."
The Appeal
Ground 1
Ground 2
"52. The Articles of the Contract set out above reveal a contractual regime, which, although a little convoluted, was relatively simple and easy to operate. The emphasis at all times was upon agreement between Contractor and Managing Contractor and consequential amendments to the Contract itself to reflect such agreement. The articles were not always willing to embrace even the possibility of disagreement between the parties, so the provisions dealing with the situation when Changes or claims were not agreed are relatively brief. However, it seems clear to me that Article 17 of the Part III document expressly anticipated that formal claims for Changes or additional Site Establishment costs would be made by Birse when their agreement was not possible.
53. Prima facie, therefore, Birse's cause of action in respect of each of their individual claims (whether for Changes or for additional Site Establishment costs) accrued once the relevant event triggering the claim had occurred; the two steps within the overall 10-day period in Article 17.0 had been taken by Birse; and Fluor had either rejected the claim or had, at the very least, failed promptly to respond to it. As I have said, given the short period in which Birse had to make its claim (10 days from the happening of the relevant event), it seems to me that Fluor would have itself to respond to such claim promptly, and inactivity on its part beyond a relatively short response period would be deemed a denial of the claim made.
54. The prima facie position outlined above would have this additional attraction: that the cause of action – the right to payment – would accrue, if not precisely when the work was done, then certainly within a relatively short period of the relevant event that triggered that right. To that extent, therefore, it seems to me that such a position is broadly consistent with the principles in Coburn v College [1897] 1 QB 702 and Reeves v Butcher [1891] 2 QB 509, above.
55. In the present case, it is agreed that each of the 29 events which give rise to Birse's claim in these proceedings had occurred by 14 November 1996, which was also the date of Birse's formal claim for additional site establishment costs under the contract. As previously noted, it appears that, although the notice of acceptance of work was not provided until September 1997, the works carried out between November 1996 and September 1997 were of a snagging/completion nature and are not – and have never been – the subject of any of Birse's claims.
56 Accordingly, on this prima facie analysis, Birse's causes of action under the contract in respect of each of the 29 events would have accrued in late November/December 1996. Such claims would, therefore, be statute-barred. … Accordingly, the key question then becomes: Is there some reason why this prima facie analysis is incorrect? Is there anything else in the contract which provided that a cause of action was not complete until the happening of some later event, after November/December 1996, which would mean that Birse's cause of action was not, in fact, statute-barred? I consider that point in paragraphs 57–76 below."
"The contract required Birse to act promptly on the happening of any event which might give rise to a claim. It would be wholly inconsistent with those provisions to argue that, on the one hand, Birse had to notify Fluor almost immediately of any event which might conceivably give rise to a claim, but on the other to say that such a claim – if disputed – was not actionable until months or years later, when a notice of acceptance of the work was eventually issued by Fluor."
I agree.
"In summary on this issue, therefore, I find that the 14 November 1996 claim was, in effect, Birse's formal claim for additional monies for Site Establishment and was the only claim which survived the settlement of 15 November 1997. I find that the claim document of April 1997 was simply a revision of that original claim. I find that there was no separate or different cause of action accruing to Birse simply because it chose to recast and resubmit its claim in April 1997 or because there was no formal response by Fluor to that recast claim until August 1997. In my judgment, it is simply contrary to common sense to suggest that there was a new duty and a new breach every time Birse put in a recast claim. The obligation fairly and properly to assess and/or estimate and/or agree was an inherent part of the contract, and any breach occurred when Fluor failed to respond to the claim (whether fairly or at all). To the extent that this breach gave rise to a separate cause of action, I consider that that cause of action arose at the same time as the cause of action under the contract itself. In this case, I consider that the date of accrual of each cause of action was in late November/December 1996, and was probably on or about 9 December 1996."
Grounds 3 to 5
CONCLUSION
Lord Justice Carnwath
Mr Justice Patten